Ecosystem Network Analysis

Ecosystem Network Analysis



Chesapeake Bay Trophic Network

In tracing the trophic connections among the populations of even the simplest ecosystems, the emerging picture soon comes to resemble a hopeless jumble, sometimes referred to as a "bird's nest" or "spaghetti" diagram. Yet within such a depiction lie valuable clues to how the ecosystem is functioning. "Ecosystem network analysis" is the rubric applied to a collection of quantitative methods that systematically teases most pertinent information from the full, complicated network description.

Basically, an analysis of an ecosystem trophic network requires that one know "Who eats whom?" and "At what rate?" One usually begins by defining the key component populations that comprise the ecosystem, and then choosing a medium of exchange (e.g., carbon, nitrogen, phosphorus, energy, etc.) The bulk of one's work is devoted to estimating the rates of exchange of this medium among all the compartments. Software packages to assist an investigator in constructing and balancing such networks of exchanges currently are under development by Villy Christensen (ECOPATH2) and Lewi Stone (CARBON).

Ulanowicz is now collaborating with NOAA's Great Lakes Environmental Research Laboratory in the creation of Windows version of the Network Analysis routines. To download the latest version, please go to EcoNetwrk.

In addition, Drs. Cristina Bondavalli and Stefano Allesina of the University of Parma are writing some NETWRK- based software for the Windows environment. It is called the WAND Project.

For those who still like to work in a DOS environment, several analysis packages can still be downloaded from this page:

All programs were written in primitive FORTRAN and compiled for MS-DOS. Source codes can be obtained from the author . There is no charge for academic use, but a modest fee is assessed to commercial organizations.

Other investigators with homepages dealing with ecosystem network analysis include James J. Kay, Robert Christian, Joesph Luczkovich, Dan Baird,...


Return to HomePage of R. E. Ulanowicz